Related
I have an input type="image". This acts like the cell notes in Microsoft Excel. If someone enters a number into the text box that this input-image is paired with, I setup an event handler for the input-image. Then when the user clicks the image, they get a little popup to add some notes to the data.
My problem is that when a user enters a zero into the text box, I need to disable the input-image's event handler. I have tried the following, but to no avail.
$('#myimage').click(function { return false; });
jQuery ≥ 1.7
With jQuery 1.7 onward the event API has been updated, .bind()/.unbind() are still available for backwards compatibility, but the preferred method is using the on()/off() functions. The below would now be,
$('#myimage').click(function() { return false; }); // Adds another click event
$('#myimage').off('click');
$('#myimage').on('click.mynamespace', function() { /* Do stuff */ });
$('#myimage').off('click.mynamespace');
jQuery < 1.7
In your example code you are simply adding another click event to the image, not overriding the previous one:
$('#myimage').click(function() { return false; }); // Adds another click event
Both click events will then get fired.
As people have said you can use unbind to remove all click events:
$('#myimage').unbind('click');
If you want to add a single event and then remove it (without removing any others that might have been added) then you can use event namespacing:
$('#myimage').bind('click.mynamespace', function() { /* Do stuff */ });
and to remove just your event:
$('#myimage').unbind('click.mynamespace');
This wasn't available when this question was answered, but you can also use the live() method to enable/disable events.
$('#myimage:not(.disabled)').live('click', myclickevent);
$('#mydisablebutton').click( function () { $('#myimage').addClass('disabled'); });
What will happen with this code is that when you click #mydisablebutton, it will add the class disabled to the #myimage element. This will make it so that the selector no longer matches the element and the event will not be fired until the 'disabled' class is removed making the .live() selector valid again.
This has other benefits by adding styling based on that class as well.
This can be done by using the unbind function.
$('#myimage').unbind('click');
You can add multiple event handlers to the same object and event in jquery. This means adding a new one doesn't replace the old ones.
There are several strategies for changing event handlers, such as event namespaces. There are some pages about this in the online docs.
Look at this question (that's how I learned of unbind). There is some useful description of these strategies in the answers.
How to read bound hover callback functions in jquery
If you want to respond to an event just one time, the following syntax should be really helpful:
$('.myLink').bind('click', function() {
//do some things
$(this).unbind('click', arguments.callee); //unbind *just this handler*
});
Using arguments.callee, we can ensure that the one specific anonymous-function handler is removed, and thus, have a single time handler for a given event. Hope this helps others.
maybe the unbind method will work for you
$("#myimage").unbind("click");
I had to set the event to null using the prop and the attr. I couldn't do it with one or the other. I also could not get .unbind to work. I am working on a TD element.
.prop("onclick", null).attr("onclick", null)
If event is attached this way, and the target is to be unattached:
$('#container').on('click','span',function(eo){
alert(1);
$(this).off(); //seams easy, but does not work
$('#container').off('click','span'); //clears click event for every span
$(this).on("click",function(){return false;}); //this works.
});
You may be adding the onclick handler as inline markup:
<input id="addreport" type="button" value="Add New Report" onclick="openAdd()" />
If so, the jquery .off() or .unbind() won't work. You need to add the original event handler in jquery as well:
$("#addreport").on("click", "", function (e) {
openAdd();
});
Then the jquery has a reference to the event handler and can remove it:
$("#addreport").off("click")
VoidKing mentions this a little more obliquely in a comment above.
If you use $(document).on() to add a listener to a dynamically created element then you may have to use the following to remove it:
// add the listener
$(document).on('click','.element',function(){
// stuff
});
// remove the listener
$(document).off("click", ".element");
To remove ALL event-handlers, this is what worked for me:
To remove all event handlers mean to have the plain HTML structure without all the event handlers attached to the element and its child nodes. To do this, jQuery's clone() helped.
var original, clone;
// element with id my-div and its child nodes have some event-handlers
original = $('#my-div');
clone = original.clone();
//
original.replaceWith(clone);
With this, we'll have the clone in place of the original with no event-handlers on it.
Good Luck...
Updated for 2014
Using the latest version of jQuery, you're now able to unbind all events on a namespace by simply doing $( "#foo" ).off( ".myNamespace" );
Best way to remove inline onclick event is $(element).prop('onclick', null);
Thanks for the information. very helpful i used it for locking page interaction while in edit mode by another user. I used it in conjunction with ajaxComplete. Not necesarily the same behavior but somewhat similar.
function userPageLock(){
$("body").bind("ajaxComplete.lockpage", function(){
$("body").unbind("ajaxComplete.lockpage");
executePageLock();
});
};
function executePageLock(){
//do something
}
In case .on() method was previously used with particular selector, like in the following example:
$('body').on('click', '.dynamicTarget', function () {
// Code goes here
});
Both unbind() and .off() methods are not going to work.
However, .undelegate() method could be used to completely remove handler from the event for all elements which match the current selector:
$("body").undelegate(".dynamicTarget", "click")
I know this comes in late, but why not use plain JS to remove the event?
var myElement = document.getElementById("your_ID");
myElement.onclick = null;
or, if you use a named function as an event handler:
function eh(event){...}
var myElement = document.getElementById("your_ID");
myElement.addEventListener("click",eh); // add event handler
myElement.removeEventListener("click",eh); //remove it
This also works fine .Simple and easy.see http://jsfiddle.net/uZc8w/570/
$('#myimage').removeAttr("click");
if you set the onclick via html you need to removeAttr ($(this).removeAttr('onclick'))
if you set it via jquery (as the after the first click in my examples above) then you need to unbind($(this).unbind('click'))
All the approaches described did not work for me because I was adding the click event with on() to the document where the element was created at run-time:
$(document).on("click", ".button", function() {
doSomething();
});
My workaround:
As I could not unbind the ".button" class I just assigned another class to the button that had the same CSS styles. By doing so the live/on-event-handler ignored the click finally:
// prevent another click on the button by assigning another class
$(".button").attr("class","buttonOff");
Hope that helps.
Hope my below code explains all.
HTML:
(function($){
$("#btn_add").on("click",function(){
$("#btn_click").on("click",added_handler);
alert("Added new handler to button 1");
});
$("#btn_remove").on("click",function(){
$("#btn_click").off("click",added_handler);
alert("Removed new handler to button 1");
});
function fixed_handler(){
alert("Fixed handler");
}
function added_handler(){
alert("new handler");
}
$("#btn_click").on("click",fixed_handler);
$("#btn_fixed").on("click",fixed_handler);
})(jQuery);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<button id="btn_click">Button 1</button>
<button id="btn_add">Add Handler</button>
<button id="btn_remove">Remove Handler</button>
<button id="btn_fixed">Fixed Handler</button>
I had an interesting case relevant to this come up at work today where there was a scroll event handler for $(window).
// TO ELIMINATE THE RE-SELECTION AND
// RE-CREATION OF THE SAME OBJECT REDUNDANTLY IN THE FOLLOWING SNIPPETS
let $window = $(window);
$window.on('scroll', function() { .... });
But, to revoke that event handler, we can't just use
$window.off('scroll');
because there are likely other scroll event handlers on this very common target, and I'm not interested in hosing that other functionality (known or unknown) by turning off all of the scroll handlers.
My solution was to first abstract the handler functionality into a named function, and use that in the event listener setup.
function handleScrollingForXYZ() { ...... }
$window.on('scroll', handleScrollingForXYZ);
And then, conditionally, when we need to revoke that, I did this:
$window.off('scroll', $window, handleScrollingForXYZ);
The janky part is the 2nd parameter, which is redundantly selecting the original selector. But, the jquery documentation for .off() only provides one method signature for specifying the handler to remove, which requires this middle parameter to be
A selector which should match the one originally passed to .on() when attaching event handlers.
I haven't ventured to test it out with a null or '' as the 2nd parameter, but perhaps the redundant $window isn't necessary.
I have an input type="image". This acts like the cell notes in Microsoft Excel. If someone enters a number into the text box that this input-image is paired with, I setup an event handler for the input-image. Then when the user clicks the image, they get a little popup to add some notes to the data.
My problem is that when a user enters a zero into the text box, I need to disable the input-image's event handler. I have tried the following, but to no avail.
$('#myimage').click(function { return false; });
jQuery ≥ 1.7
With jQuery 1.7 onward the event API has been updated, .bind()/.unbind() are still available for backwards compatibility, but the preferred method is using the on()/off() functions. The below would now be,
$('#myimage').click(function() { return false; }); // Adds another click event
$('#myimage').off('click');
$('#myimage').on('click.mynamespace', function() { /* Do stuff */ });
$('#myimage').off('click.mynamespace');
jQuery < 1.7
In your example code you are simply adding another click event to the image, not overriding the previous one:
$('#myimage').click(function() { return false; }); // Adds another click event
Both click events will then get fired.
As people have said you can use unbind to remove all click events:
$('#myimage').unbind('click');
If you want to add a single event and then remove it (without removing any others that might have been added) then you can use event namespacing:
$('#myimage').bind('click.mynamespace', function() { /* Do stuff */ });
and to remove just your event:
$('#myimage').unbind('click.mynamespace');
This wasn't available when this question was answered, but you can also use the live() method to enable/disable events.
$('#myimage:not(.disabled)').live('click', myclickevent);
$('#mydisablebutton').click( function () { $('#myimage').addClass('disabled'); });
What will happen with this code is that when you click #mydisablebutton, it will add the class disabled to the #myimage element. This will make it so that the selector no longer matches the element and the event will not be fired until the 'disabled' class is removed making the .live() selector valid again.
This has other benefits by adding styling based on that class as well.
This can be done by using the unbind function.
$('#myimage').unbind('click');
You can add multiple event handlers to the same object and event in jquery. This means adding a new one doesn't replace the old ones.
There are several strategies for changing event handlers, such as event namespaces. There are some pages about this in the online docs.
Look at this question (that's how I learned of unbind). There is some useful description of these strategies in the answers.
How to read bound hover callback functions in jquery
If you want to respond to an event just one time, the following syntax should be really helpful:
$('.myLink').bind('click', function() {
//do some things
$(this).unbind('click', arguments.callee); //unbind *just this handler*
});
Using arguments.callee, we can ensure that the one specific anonymous-function handler is removed, and thus, have a single time handler for a given event. Hope this helps others.
maybe the unbind method will work for you
$("#myimage").unbind("click");
I had to set the event to null using the prop and the attr. I couldn't do it with one or the other. I also could not get .unbind to work. I am working on a TD element.
.prop("onclick", null).attr("onclick", null)
If event is attached this way, and the target is to be unattached:
$('#container').on('click','span',function(eo){
alert(1);
$(this).off(); //seams easy, but does not work
$('#container').off('click','span'); //clears click event for every span
$(this).on("click",function(){return false;}); //this works.
});
You may be adding the onclick handler as inline markup:
<input id="addreport" type="button" value="Add New Report" onclick="openAdd()" />
If so, the jquery .off() or .unbind() won't work. You need to add the original event handler in jquery as well:
$("#addreport").on("click", "", function (e) {
openAdd();
});
Then the jquery has a reference to the event handler and can remove it:
$("#addreport").off("click")
VoidKing mentions this a little more obliquely in a comment above.
If you use $(document).on() to add a listener to a dynamically created element then you may have to use the following to remove it:
// add the listener
$(document).on('click','.element',function(){
// stuff
});
// remove the listener
$(document).off("click", ".element");
To remove ALL event-handlers, this is what worked for me:
To remove all event handlers mean to have the plain HTML structure without all the event handlers attached to the element and its child nodes. To do this, jQuery's clone() helped.
var original, clone;
// element with id my-div and its child nodes have some event-handlers
original = $('#my-div');
clone = original.clone();
//
original.replaceWith(clone);
With this, we'll have the clone in place of the original with no event-handlers on it.
Good Luck...
Updated for 2014
Using the latest version of jQuery, you're now able to unbind all events on a namespace by simply doing $( "#foo" ).off( ".myNamespace" );
Best way to remove inline onclick event is $(element).prop('onclick', null);
Thanks for the information. very helpful i used it for locking page interaction while in edit mode by another user. I used it in conjunction with ajaxComplete. Not necesarily the same behavior but somewhat similar.
function userPageLock(){
$("body").bind("ajaxComplete.lockpage", function(){
$("body").unbind("ajaxComplete.lockpage");
executePageLock();
});
};
function executePageLock(){
//do something
}
In case .on() method was previously used with particular selector, like in the following example:
$('body').on('click', '.dynamicTarget', function () {
// Code goes here
});
Both unbind() and .off() methods are not going to work.
However, .undelegate() method could be used to completely remove handler from the event for all elements which match the current selector:
$("body").undelegate(".dynamicTarget", "click")
I know this comes in late, but why not use plain JS to remove the event?
var myElement = document.getElementById("your_ID");
myElement.onclick = null;
or, if you use a named function as an event handler:
function eh(event){...}
var myElement = document.getElementById("your_ID");
myElement.addEventListener("click",eh); // add event handler
myElement.removeEventListener("click",eh); //remove it
This also works fine .Simple and easy.see http://jsfiddle.net/uZc8w/570/
$('#myimage').removeAttr("click");
if you set the onclick via html you need to removeAttr ($(this).removeAttr('onclick'))
if you set it via jquery (as the after the first click in my examples above) then you need to unbind($(this).unbind('click'))
All the approaches described did not work for me because I was adding the click event with on() to the document where the element was created at run-time:
$(document).on("click", ".button", function() {
doSomething();
});
My workaround:
As I could not unbind the ".button" class I just assigned another class to the button that had the same CSS styles. By doing so the live/on-event-handler ignored the click finally:
// prevent another click on the button by assigning another class
$(".button").attr("class","buttonOff");
Hope that helps.
Hope my below code explains all.
HTML:
(function($){
$("#btn_add").on("click",function(){
$("#btn_click").on("click",added_handler);
alert("Added new handler to button 1");
});
$("#btn_remove").on("click",function(){
$("#btn_click").off("click",added_handler);
alert("Removed new handler to button 1");
});
function fixed_handler(){
alert("Fixed handler");
}
function added_handler(){
alert("new handler");
}
$("#btn_click").on("click",fixed_handler);
$("#btn_fixed").on("click",fixed_handler);
})(jQuery);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<button id="btn_click">Button 1</button>
<button id="btn_add">Add Handler</button>
<button id="btn_remove">Remove Handler</button>
<button id="btn_fixed">Fixed Handler</button>
I had an interesting case relevant to this come up at work today where there was a scroll event handler for $(window).
// TO ELIMINATE THE RE-SELECTION AND
// RE-CREATION OF THE SAME OBJECT REDUNDANTLY IN THE FOLLOWING SNIPPETS
let $window = $(window);
$window.on('scroll', function() { .... });
But, to revoke that event handler, we can't just use
$window.off('scroll');
because there are likely other scroll event handlers on this very common target, and I'm not interested in hosing that other functionality (known or unknown) by turning off all of the scroll handlers.
My solution was to first abstract the handler functionality into a named function, and use that in the event listener setup.
function handleScrollingForXYZ() { ...... }
$window.on('scroll', handleScrollingForXYZ);
And then, conditionally, when we need to revoke that, I did this:
$window.off('scroll', $window, handleScrollingForXYZ);
The janky part is the 2nd parameter, which is redundantly selecting the original selector. But, the jquery documentation for .off() only provides one method signature for specifying the handler to remove, which requires this middle parameter to be
A selector which should match the one originally passed to .on() when attaching event handlers.
I haven't ventured to test it out with a null or '' as the 2nd parameter, but perhaps the redundant $window isn't necessary.
I am sorry that my origin description is not clear. I have revised my question:
I am using jQuery, as shown in the attached picture, each time I attach an event listener (e.g. click) to an element, it will fire twice. It looks like this problem is due to the jQuery debugger.
I would like to ask if there is any approach other than adding unbind() or off() before the listener to solve the problem, I have tried these approaches but it removes the listeners already attached to the elements
(e.g. I have #element1 which is created in html, then use jQuery to append two elements #element2 and #element3 to #element1, if I use
$('#element1').off('click').on('click', '#element2', function(){
//implementation
}
$('#element1').off('click').on('click', '#element3', function(){
//implementation
}
the click event of #element2 will no longer work because the click listener attached on it is removed in this situation. So I am asking if there is a better way to do it?
By the way, I am wondering where is the VM 7188 listener comes from (it looks like from jQuery debugger) and if there is anyway to remove this listener so that I no longer need to use off() every time when I write a listener, thanks.
Attached picture for duplicated listeners
It's unclear why you'd need to remove and attach a handler to #element1 just because #element2 is removed and dynamically created; you're using delegated syntax, so it's totally fine that #element2 is dynamically created. You only need to set that handler once, regardless. Example:
// Note this continues to work even as we remove and recreate #element2
$("#element1").on("click", "#element2", function() {
console.log("Got the click on #element2");
});
function tick() {
$("#element1").append("<span id='element2'>Click me</span>");
setTimeout(function() {
$("#element2").remove();
setTimeout(tick, 500);
}, 1500);
}
tick();
<div id="element1"></div>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
But to target specific handlers, you can use event namespaces, e.g.:
$('#element1').off("click.my-namespace").on('click.my-namespace', '#element2', function(){
//implementation
});
For more, see "Event names and namespaces" in the documentation.
I'm not a jquery person, but it seems to me that you are adding the handler to a child descendant and therefore the event bubbles. Instead of adding/removing listeners like this, when adding the handler to children, consider adding event.stopPropagation()
$('#element1').unbind().on('click', '#element2', function(e){
e.stopPropagation();//#element1 won't receive this anymore
//implementation
}
You can call inline function, add attr to your element
onclick="handler"
Remove old handler before bind new
$("#element1").off("click", "#element2", handler);
$("#element1").on("click", "#element2", handler);
Assuming that there are a large number of elements throughout the site that have an unknown number and type of events bound to them.
If I need to override all of these events with one single bound event, and only that event will fire, what are some recommendations?
I would be binding the event to a click event handler, and I am using jQuery.
Thanks in advance.
You’re looking for jQuery#unbind.
To remove all event handlers on an element or a set of elements, just do:
$('.some-selector').unbind();
To unbind only click handlers, use unbind('click'):
$('.some-selector').unbind('click');
To unbind all click handlers and immediately bind your own handler after that, you can do something like this:
$('.some-selector').unbind('click').click(function(event) {
// Your code goes here
});
Note that this will only work for events bound using jQuery (using .bind or any jQuery method that uses .bind internally). If you want to remove all possible onclick events from a given set of elements, you could use:
$('.some-selector')
.unbind('click') // takes care of jQuery-bound click events
.attr('onclick', '') // clears `onclick` attributes in the HTML
.each(function() { // reset `onclick` event handlers
this.onclick = null;
});
I would like to provide a thought without removing all events all together (just override them).
If your new one single bound event (we call it "click" here) is specific to the element it binds to, then I believe you can ignore any other events simply by stopPropagation() function. Like this
$("specific-selector").on("click", ".specific-class", function (e) {
e.stopPropagation()
// e.stopImmediatePropagation()
/* your code continues ... */
});
It will stop events bubbles up, so your other events won't fire. use stopImmediatePropagation() to prevent other events attached onto the same elements as "click" does.
For example, if "mouseleave" event is also bind to $("specific-selector .specific-class") element, it won't fire, too.
At last, all other events won't fire on this element but your new "click" element.
The unsolved question is, what if other events also use stopPropagation()? ... Then I think the one with best specification wins, so try to avoid complex, too many events is final suggestion.
You can see "Direct and delegated events" on jQuery site for more information.
Looks like this is pretty simple actually:
$('#foo').unbind('click');
$('#foo').bind('click', myNewFunction);
Thanks for your responses though.
Try to use live instead of bind. Then you can easily remove live binding with die from selector which is fast operation and set another live equally fast.
$('selection here').live('..', .....); // multiple invocations
$('selection here').die();
$('selection here').live('click',.....);
DOM is not touched at all. Event condition is evaluated on event occurrence.
But generally if you just want to swap handler functions why not to do it this way:
var ahandler = function(evt) { /* first implementation */ }
$('.selector').bind('click', function(evt) { ahandler(evt); });
//and then if you want to change handlers
ahandler = function(evt) { /* new implementation */ };
This gives absolutely no cost of any changes, rebinding etc.
I have setup onclick event handler in the following manner:
element.onclick = function() { /*code */ }
Imagine there are event handlers setup using jQuery method bind() or similar handlers.
$('element').bind('click', function(){/*another function*/})
How can I prevent invoking handler defined with jQuery from the handler I have described in the beginning?
NB stopPropagation() and etc. jQuery's methods doesn't work from that function, because it is passed with native event object.
I'm not 100% sure what you're asking but maybe this will help:
You can create a new event object (compliant with W3C DOM) via jQuery's exposed Event constructor:
For example:
element.onclick = function(e) {
var aBetterEventObject = jQuery.Event(e);
// Now you can do what you want: (Cross-browser)
aBetterEventObject.preventDefault()
aBetterEventObject.isDefaultPrevented()
aBetterEventObject.stopPropagation()
aBetterEventObject.isPropagationStopped()
aBetterEventObject.stopImmediatePropagation()
aBetterEventObject.isImmediatePropagationStopped()
}
EDIT: Reading through your question again, I don't think propagation is the problem - you seem to want to cancel an event handler from running within an event handler - I'm not sure this is possible. You could just unbind all handlers (jQuery(elem).unbind('click')) but I don't think that's what you're after...
try to add the following line in the jQuery event handler:
return false;
Following on from JimmyP's answer. I've tried this
$('#x').click( function(e){
alert('hello');
});
document.getElementById('x').onclick = function(){
$('#x').unbind('click');
alert("goodbye");
}
The jQuery event runs once in this example. I don't think you can rely on the order of handlers being invoked however you define them, so I guess you'll have to accept that the jQuery event might fire once. Adding the onclick first does prevent the jQuery event from firing at all but, as I said, I don't think that's reliable.
Jquery has a method for namespacing events. http://docs.jquery.com/Namespaced_Events
You can add, trigger and remove separate functions bound to the same event via namespaces:
$("a").bind("click.custom1",function(){ ... });
$("a").bind("click.custom2",function(){ ... });
$("a").trigger("click.custom2");
$("a").unbind("click.custom2");
As long as you unbind the namespaced event your normal onclick should be unaffected. You may have to bind two separate namespaces to the click event as above if that doesn't work.